Pubdate: 27 Jun 1999 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 1999 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.phillynews.com/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Author: Douglas Farah, Washington Post LOSS OF PANAMA BASE HURTS ANTIDRUG EFFORTS The united states is scrambling to locate new facilities in the region. Aerial surveillance has suffered. The May transfer of a U.S. military base to Panama has left a gaping hole in American counter-drug efforts in Central America and the Caribbean, forcing the Clinton administration to scramble for new facilities that can be used to track drug shipments from South America. All U.S. forces are scheduled to leave Panama, formerly headquarters of the U.S. Southern Command, by the end of the year under terms of the Panama Canal treaties. On May 1, Howard Air Force Base was turned over to Panama, depriving the United States of a base for 22 surveillance aircraft and causing a sharp drop in antidrug coverage of the region. To maintain a presence in the area, the Clinton administration has hastily negotiated a short-term agreement with the Netherlands to station aircraft at airports in the Dutch Caribbean protectorates of Aruba and Curacao. It negotiated a similar agreement with Ecuador to station planes in the Pacific coast city of Manta. Washington seeks a third such agreement in Central America and is negotiating with Costa Rica. All those airfields, however, will require substantial improvements, including new maintenance facilities and housing, that will cost more than $100 million, Pentagon officials said. U.S. aircraft flew about 2,000 surveillance missions from Howard last year, gathering counterdrug intelligence for the United States and other countries in the region, officials said. Pentagon officials said that even under ideal circumstances regaining the surveillance capability that they had in Panama would take two to three years. All the cocaine and most of the heroin used in the United States is produced in South America and moved north by airplane or ship through Central America and Mexico or the Caribbean. In a May 20 letter to Defense Secretary William S. Cohen, four Republican congressmen warned that the loss of Howard had presented the United States with "one of the worst disasters in our U.S. counterdrug history." "These counterdrug flights are essential for information-sharing with other countries in the region, for eradication and narcotics interdiction," said the letter from representatives John L. Mica of Florida, Benjamin A. Gilman of New York, Mark Souder of Indiana and Bob Barr of Georgia. "Without these essential flights the department is creating a wide-open door to drug traffickers and destroying the first line of defense against illegal narcotics traffickers." The letter said that "failed negotiations" with Panama and "the absence of adequate advance planning" had endangered the drug war. Barry R. McCaffrey, national drug policy director, said he was "worried" by the loss of Howard but blamed the delay in getting the new bases operational on then-Panamanian President Ernesto Perez Balladares, who, he said, had agreed privately to extend the U.S. presence in Panama, then backed out last September. "I'm very disappointed," McCaffrey said. "It has put us in a scramble." Ana Maria Salazar, deputy assistant secretary of defense for drug enforcement policy, said at a congressional hearing on May 4 that the Pentagon could not approach other countries about hosting U.S. surveillance aircraft until the talks with Panama formally ended. That left little time to put other agreements together, she said. The opening of the centers in Aruba and Curacao will eventually allow the United States to fly about 65 percent of the surveillance missions that it flew out of Howard last year, Pentagon officials said. That level will increase to 110 percent after the center at Manta and a third site in Central America begin operating, the officials said. The agreement with the Netherlands runs through September, and the agreement with Ecuador expires next May. But U.S. officials expressed confidence that the host countries would agree to long-term arrangements. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea